| 167th Rifle Division | |
|---|---|
| Active | 1941 (1st formation) 1942–1946 (2nd formation) |
| Country | |
| Branch | |
| Type | Infantry |
| Engagements | |
| Decorations | |
| Battle honours | Sumy (2nd formation) Kiev (2nd formation) |
The167th Rifle Division was an infantry division of theRed Army of theSoviet Union, formed twice.
The division was formed atBalashov in theVolga Military District in July 1940, under the command ofKombrigVasily Rakovsky. Just before the beginning ofOperation Barbarossa, the June 1941 German invasion of the Soviet Union, the division became part of the63rd Rifle Corps. After the beginning of Operation Barbarossa, the division and its corps were sent to the front, joining the21st Army of theReserve of the High Command (Stavka reserve). From 28 June, the 167th fought in defense of positions betweenRogachev andZhlobin. During theBattle of Smolensk the division repulsed German attempts to cross theDnieper. Launching a counterattack, it advanced to the line of theDrut River and remained there until 12 August, when it was withdrawn to the army reserve. Relocated to the area of Dovsk, the division defended the latter as part of the67th Rifle Corps, fighting in encirclement from 13 August. Due to its loss of contact with the 67th Rifle Corps, the 167th returned to the control of the 63rd Rifle Corps from 14 August. In the encirclement, Rakovsky decided to destroy heavy weapons and ordered the division to escape in groups. He led a group of 25 others out of the encirclement with their weapons in the sector of the155th Rifle Division of theBryansk Front on 18 September; about 2,500 men of the division escaped the encirclement. The units that escaped encirclement were disbanded and their men used to reinforce other units.[1]
On 16 December 1941, the 438th Rifle Division was formed in the Ural Military District. On 23 January 1942, it became the 167th Rifle Division (Second Formation).[2] The division was recreated at Ssucho Lug in February 1942 and fought near Bryansk and at Kursk. The division fought in theBattle of the Dnieper. Division personnel MajorFyodor Bruy, Junior lieutenantAlexander Bondarev, Sergeant majorArkady Chepelev, Senior sergeantAlexey Gabrusev, SergeantAndrian Zhuravlev and PrivateDmitry Yemelyanov, among others, were awarded the titleHero of the Soviet Union for their actions during the battle.[3] The division fought in the Carpathians and in Hungary. The division was with the1st Guards Army of the 4th Ukrainian Front in May 1945. The division ended the war with the honorifics "Sumy-Kiev Twice Red Banner". Postwar, the division moved toChortkov with the 107th Rifle Corps, part of the38th Army in theCarpathian Military District. The division and its corps were disbanded in May 1946.[4]